Percentage of Children Receiving All Vaccinations as Recommended or Acceptably Early
States on this page: South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Vermont

Related pages show these charts:
Alabama-California | Colorado-Florida | Georgia-Iowa | Kansas-Maryland | Massachusetts-Missouri
Montana-New Jersey | New Mexico-Ohio | Oklahoma-South Carolina | Virginia-Wyoming

Download an Excel (.xls) file of all states' charts Microsoft Excel spreadsheet file

NOTE: If you need exact numbers or would like the charts in a different format, please contact Beth Luman at ELuman@cdc.gov



Graph displaying percent of children receiving all vaccinations as recommended or acceptably early. Reference state: South Dakota
*US children aged 19-35 months in the 2000-2002 National Immunization Survey
**4 doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine, 3 doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
3 or 4 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
***From 4 days before the minimum acceptable age through the routinely recommended age, as recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians

This graph shows the percentages of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. South Dakota is the reference state, and its confidence bar is shaded across the graph. Those states on the left with confidence bars that do not overlap South Dakota’s (MS, NE, NY, MT, NJ, OK, IN, FL, CA, NM, CO, HI, OR, DC, NC, MN, IL, WI, KY, LA, OH, IA, MI, TN, AZ, GA) have statistically significantly lower rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Those states on the right with confidence bars that do not overlap South Dakota’s (NH, MA) have statistically higher rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. The remaining states have confidence bars that overlap the shaded area and were not statistically different from South Dakota at the alpha=.05 level.


Graph displaying percent of children receiving all vaccinations as recommended or acceptably early. Reference state: Tennessee
*US children aged 19-35 months in the 2000-2002 National Immunization Survey
**4 doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine, 3 doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
3 or 4 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
***From 4 days before the minimum acceptable age through the routinely recommended age, as recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians

This graph shows the percentages of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Tennessee is the reference state, and its confidence bar is shaded across the graph. Those states on the left with confidence bars that do not overlap Tennessee’s (MS, NE, NY, MT, IN, CA) have statistically significantly lower rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Those states on the right with confidence bars that do not overlap Tennessee’s (AL, SD, MD, RI, NV, CT, SC, NH, MA) have statistically higher rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. The remaining states have confidence bars that overlap the shaded area and were not statistically different from Tennessee at the alpha=.05 level.


Graph displaying percent of children receiving all vaccinations as recommended or acceptably early. Reference state: Texas
*US children aged 19-35 months in the 2000-2002 National Immunization Survey
**4 doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine, 3 doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
3 or 4 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
***From 4 days before the minimum acceptable age through the routinely recommended age, as recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians

This graph shows the percentages of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Texas is the reference state, and its confidence bar is shaded across the graph. Those states on the left with confidence bars that do not overlap Texas’ (MS, NE, NY, MT, NJ, OK, IN, FL, CA, NM, CO, HI, OR, IL, WI) have statistically significantly lower rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Those states on the right with confidence bars that do not overlap Texas’ (CT, SC, NH, MA) have statistically higher rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. The remaining states have confidence bars that overlap the shaded area and were not statistically different from Texas at the alpha=.05 level.



Graph displaying percent of children receiving all vaccinations as recommended or acceptably early. Reference state: Utah
*US children aged 19-35 months in the 2000-2002 National Immunization Survey
**4 doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine, 3 doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
3 or 4 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
***From 4 days before the minimum acceptable age through the routinely recommended age, as recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians

This graph shows the percentages of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Utah is the reference state, and its confidence bar is shaded across the graph. Those states on the left with confidence bars that do not overlap Utah’s (MS, NE, NY, MT, NJ, OK, IN, FL, CA, NM, CO, HI, OR, DC, NC, MN, IL, WI, KY, LA, OH, MI, TN, AZ) have statistically significantly lower rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Those states on the right with confidence bars that do not overlap Utah’s (NH, MA) have statistically higher rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. The remaining states have confidence bars that overlap the shaded area and were not statistically different from Utah at the alpha=.05 level.


Graph displaying percent of children receiving all vaccinations as recommended or acceptably early. Reference state: Vermont
*US children aged 19-35 months in the 2000-2002 National Immunization Survey
**4 doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine, 3 doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1 dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
3 or 4 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine
***From 4 days before the minimum acceptable age through the routinely recommended age, as recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians

This graph shows the percentages of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Vermont is the reference state, and its confidence bar is shaded across the graph. Those states on the left with confidence bars that do not overlap Vermont’s (MS, NE, NY, MT, NJ, IN, CA) have statistically significantly lower rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. Those states on the right with confidence bars that do not overlap Vermont’s (RI, NV, CT, SC, NH, MA) have statistically higher rates of children who received all vaccinations as acceptable. The remaining states have confidence bars that overlap the shaded area and were not statistically different from Vermont at the alpha=.05 level.

This page last modified on August 16, 2002
Content last reviewed on August 16, 2002

This page is located at http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/stats-surv/nis/articles/sd-vt_acc.htm